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GCSE/Combined Science/OCR

C6.1Improving processes and products: extraction of metals (electrolysis, blast furnace, biological methods), recycling and life-cycle assessment

Notes

Extracting and reusing metals

Reactivity decides the method

Whether a metal is extracted by reduction with carbon or by electrolysis depends on its position in the reactivity series.

  • More reactive than carbon (K, Na, Ca, Mg, Al) → extracted by electrolysis of a molten ore (energy-intensive but the only way).
  • Less reactive than carbon (Zn, Fe, Sn, Cu) → extracted by reduction with carbon in a blast furnace (cheaper, well-established).
  • Below hydrogen (Ag, Au, Pt) → often found native (uncombined).

Iron in the blast furnace

Iron(III) oxide is reduced by carbon monoxide:

Fe₂O₃ + 3CO → 2Fe + 3CO₂

Coke burns to make heat; limestone removes silicate impurities as molten slag (CaSiO₃).

Aluminium by electrolysis

Al₂O₃ is dissolved in molten cryolite (lowers melting point from ~2050°C to ~950°C → energy saving).

  • Cathode (−): Al³⁺ + 3e⁻ → Al
  • Anode (+): 2O²⁻ → O₂ + 4e⁻ (oxygen reacts with carbon anode → CO₂; anodes burn away and must be replaced).

Biological extraction (Higher)

Used for low-grade copper ores where mining and smelting are uneconomic:

  • Phytomining: plants absorb metal ions; ash is smelted.
  • Bioleaching: bacteria oxidise sulphide ores → leachate solution; copper recovered by displacement (e.g. with scrap iron) or electrolysis.

Biological methods are slower but use less energy, less land disturbance and lower CO₂ emissions.

Life-cycle assessment (LCA)

A cradle-to-grave audit of environmental impact, with four stages: raw materials → manufacture → use → disposal/recycling. Compares two products by total energy/water use, CO₂ produced, and waste at each stage.

Recycling lowers raw-material extraction, energy use and landfill — but transport and reprocessing themselves use energy. LCAs are partly subjective: some impacts are easy to quantify (kWh) and others are not (visual amenity).

OCR exam tip

When choosing between extraction methods, justify "why this metal" — link reactivity, cost, energy, and supply.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Choose the extraction method

    OCR Paper C2 (Foundation)

    State the method used to extract each metal from its ore and explain why:

    (a) Iron (2 marks)
    (b) Aluminium (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

  2. Question 23 marks

    Bioleaching of copper

    OCR Paper C2 (Higher)

    Bacteria can be used to extract copper from low-grade sulphide ores (bioleaching).

    Suggest two advantages and one disadvantage of bioleaching compared with traditional smelting. (3 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

  3. Question 32 marks

    LCA limitations

    OCR Paper C2 (Higher)

    A company claims its plastic carrier bag is more environmentally friendly than a paper bag because the LCA shows lower CO₂ emissions.

    Suggest two reasons why an LCA might not give a fully objective comparison. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves

Flashcards

C6.1 — Improving processes and products: extraction of metals (electrolysis, blast furnace, biological methods), recycling and life-cycle assessment

7-card SR deck for OCR GCSE Combined Science — Leaves (batch 1) topic C6.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)